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High quality bronze tanka (bahloli) of Humayun (1530-1556), Mughal Empire, 937 A

$ 17.39

Availability: 99 in stock
  • Certification: Uncertified

    Description

    Inscriptions on both sides - Minted at the location of Dar-ul-Khalifat Agra, WITHOUT a knot in the middle of the coin / Dated to 937, above and below a floral pattern. Dated to 937 AH = 1530 AD. Mint of Dar-ul-Khalifat ("seat of the Khalifate") Agra. Excellent coin, very attractive, thick and heavy, rare in such high quality. 18mm in diameter, 9.02 grams. #117242. Scarce one-year type. Humayun (March 6, 1508 - February 22, 1556), second Mughal Emperor, and ruled in India from 1530-1540 and 1555-1556. He was 22 and inexperienced when he came to power. Humayun succeeded his father Baber in India in 1530, while his brother Kamran obtained the sovereignty of Kabul and Lahore. Humayun was thus left in possession of his father's recent conquests, which were in dispute with the Indian Afghans under Sher Shah, governor of Bengal and an ethnic Afghan from Eastern India, and his ally, the Lodi dynasty. Sher Shah defeated Humayun in battle of Chausa on June 26, 1539. After ten years of fighting, Humayun was driven out of India and compelled to rule of Sher Shan was a time of economic reform for the Mughal Empire. Humayun fled to the Safavid Empire and reluctantly converted to Shia Islam for the protection of Tahmasp I. Sher Shah died in 1546. Humayan returned to the throne in 1555 with troops from Tahmasp I. After he reoccupied Delhi (1555) India thus passed again from the Afghans to the g his period in exile, his wife gave birth to Akbar the Great. Humayun died from injuries he sustained after falling down a flight of stairs while descending from the second floor of his library to pray.
    On Sep 29, 2022 at 12:49:54 PDT, seller added the following information: